Vampire TV shows are nothing new. But, if Rob Thomas has his way, he’s going to do something very new with The Lost Boys. The CW just revealed it has acquired a show based on the hit 1987 film that’ll explore what it means to be immortal.

You can watch popular CW shows on Netflix right now. Soon though, thanks to a new deal, not only will that relationship continue, full current seasons will be uploaded soon after the finale. The Flash would proud.

Part of what makes the Friday the 13th franchise so much fun is the absurdity of Jason Voorhees as a killer. He’s an impossibility, which makes him scary, but now The CW is developing a new TV show that will most likely change that by grounding him in reality.

The CW is really digging these DC shows. How much? Well, besides renewing The Flash and Arrow for next season, the network executives are already discussing a show based on Brandon Routh's The Atom as well as an animated series based on occasional Justice League member Vixen.

We love to plot our own demise — people can't seem to get enough of stories about how our end will come to pass. But what about a new beginning? Instead of how we fall down, let's talk about how we get back up.

If you like the same TV as tweens, shows on The CW will be coming to Apple TV. MacRumors says that full episodes of CW shows will be available next day and users don't need cable authentication. Apps for Apple TV... they have to be coming, right? [MacRumors]

We were just saying yesterday that The CW seems to be where a lot of the most insane genre action is happening — and now here are promo photos of the network's four new SF/fantasy shows. The Originals and The Tomorrow People debut this fall, and Star-Crossed and The 100 come in spring 2014.

Not long ago, The CW seemed like the home of Gossip Girl and 90210, with one night of fantasy fare like Supernatural or Vampire Diaries. But this week, the network is airing finales of five genre shows. Season finales, not series. And next season, The CW adds four more SF/fantasy shows. And most of these shows are…

If you saw the latest episode of the superhero soap opera Arrow on The CW, you'll know that Tommy Merlyn took a fateful step, one there may be no going back from. But what comes next for Tommy? We caught up with actor Colin Donnell at Wondercon and asked him. Spoilers ahead...

On paper, The CW's show The Selection sounds like a slam dunk: a TV version of Hunger Games, set 300 years in the future, where the reward for winning is to marry a handsome prince. But when The CW actually filmed a pilot last year, the results were apparently not satisfactory — perhaps not surprising, given some…

One of the best parts of The Vampire Diaries right now is the semi-evil Klaus, one of the Original vampires who's also half-werewolf. (Don't ask.) So at first blush, it's exciting news to hear that The CW is thinking about giving Klaus and his Original siblings their own spinoff show, possibly focused on their…

The CW has put out a casting call for the lucky actor who will play Diana, aka Wonder Woman, in its brand new origins show. And the other day, a description of the character came out: she's "a fierce warrior with the innocent heart of a romantic." But what does that mean, exactly?

Television is littered with failed superhero TV shows. If you don't count Person of Interest, then only the only successful superhero shows of the past decade are Smallville and (for a while) Heroes. So how will Arrow, the new DC Comics adaptation launching on the CW this fall, avoid the curse of the superhero show?…

The CW is finally launching a new superhero show to replace the long-running Smallville — and it focuses on Green Arrow, DC Comics' counterpart to the Avengers' Hawkeye. Check out the first ever clip, which mostly consists of a shirtless Oliver Queen working out, making arrows, and scowling at the camera. We're in.

Spotted: Gossip Girl, a deliciously fun but terrible show, and a bunch of other CW shows like 90210 (the new one), Nikita, Supernatural, etc. all available for streaming on Netflix come October 15th. I do not mind this. [PR Newswire]

We've been waiting ages to find out what Supernatural's Eric Kripke was going to do next — assuming he wasn't really going to make an Octocobra movie, as the show suggested last spring. Now it appears Kripke's next project is a superhero show for the CW: an adaptation of DC Comics' Deadman.

The pre-Superman career of Clark Kent's superheroing has just gotten even longer, with the CW confirming that Smallville has been renewed for a tenth season. As the theme song asks weekly, won't somebody save me? [TV Guide]